In Alzheimer's disease, toxic protein clumps and deposits known as amyloid plaques are connected to the death of brain cells. Similar pathways are crucial in type 2 diabetes as well. The Technical University of Munich is leading the development of "mini-proteins," or peptides, that can bind the proteins that make amyloids and stop them from aggregating into deadly amyloids. The development of harmful protein aggregates that lead to cell death is a known cause of numerous cell-and neurological disorders. Type 2 diabetes mellitus and Alzheimer's disease, which have more than 50 million and 400 million individuals globally, respectively, are prominent examples of these disorders. Importantly, a
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